👓 Distributed Digital Transformation | Interdependent Thoughts

This is a start to more fully describe and explore a distributed version of digitisation, digitalisation and specifically digital transformation, and state why I think bringing distributed / networked thinking into them matters. Digitising stuff, digitalising routines, the regular way
Over the past ...

We need to learn to see the cumulative impact of a multitude of efforts, while simultaneously keeping all those efforts visible on their own. There exist so many initiatives I think that are great examples of how distributed digitalisation leads to transformation, but they are largely invisible outside their own context, and also not widely networked and connected enough to reach their own full potential. They are valuable on their own, but would be even more valuable to themselves and others when federated, but the federation part is mostly missing.
We need to find a better way to see the big picture, while also seeing all pixels it consists of. A macroscope, a distributed digital transformation macroscope. ❧

This seems to be a related problem to the discovery questions that Kicks Condor and Brad Enslen have been thing about.

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MATH X 451.46: Introduction to Combinatorial AnalysisSeptember 24, 2019 at 7:00 pm – 10:00 pmUniversity of California, Los Angeles, Math Sciences Building, Room 5217, Los Angeles, CA 90095, USAhttps://www.uclaextension.edu/sciences-math/math-statistics/course/introduction-combinatorial-analysis-math-x-45146 Combinatorics is the branch of mathematics that deals with problems of arrangements, partitions, and designs within a given finite or discrete system. It has applications in engineering, the physical and social sciences, operations research, and computer science. This course, the first of a two-quarter sequence, is an introductory yet rigorous survey of the theory…

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